Monday, February 25, 2019

Thursday, June 29, 2017

If you are ordering our food through DoorDash (DD), please be aware that you are contracting a third-party delivery service. Some restaurants are officially partnered with DD, we are not. Those restaurants allow DD to jack up their menu prices to compensate for the commission taken by DD. DD also charges the customer a fee. We are not fans of this "double-dipping" practice. Rather, we believe in fair, face-value pricing and transparency. There is no contract or compensation between DD and Rabieng. In cases such as ours, there is no line of communication between DD and our restaurant (other than when a DD agent phones us your order). If for instance, a mistake is made or we are unable to fulfill orders (power outage, holiday, etc.), we have no means to rectify or relay info to the customer or a DD administrator.

DD is able to circumvent an official partnership by basically passing itself off as the customer. In this capacity, DD has literally copied & pasted our menu onto its website without our consent or permission.When you place an order via the DD website, a DD agent phones us your order with your name.Your credit card payment is collected only by DD. The DD driver pays us upon pick-up with a DD issued credit card. The entire transaction is "under the radar" so to speak, as we assume we are dealing directly with our customer, when in fact it is DD. All is fine and dandy until there is a mistake, delay, etc...

With that said, we recognize that in today’s World, a third-party delivery service is convenient and mutually beneficial to all three parties involved.Mistakes have been few and far between, so we will allow DD to carry on. However, for aforementioned reasons, we cannot take responsibility for any errors, delays, issues, that may arise with your DD delivery.In this case, DO NOT CALL THE RESTAURANT, please sort the issue out with DD.

Should we determine that DD’s service is disruptive and/ or misrepresents our brand, products & services, we will take action to have DD remove our menu from its website.

Monday, March 14, 2016

Often called Guay Tiew Kaak in Thailand, which literally translates as "Noodles of Indians", this distinctive, aromatic noodle soup is like none you've ever tasted! We call it Maha Raja, and as the name suggests, this particular native noodle soup was born in the Southern region of Thailand, where Thai cooking is often influenced by the exotic spices & rich curries of neighboring India, Indonesia and Malaysia. The curry broth in our Maha Raja is rich in flavor, yet delicate in composition. The mildly sweet flavors of coconut & peanut are perfectly balanced by the tangy spice of chilies, garlic and lime. Rabieng's Maha Raja noodle soup is an authentic homage to the original with tender stewed cubed beef, thin rice noodles, sprouts, fried tofu, boiled egg, crispy shallots. Not many, if any Thai restaurants in America serve Guay Tiew Kaak, so what are you waiting for?!